If one really wishes to be free from suffering and to
experience happiness, it is very
important to work on the causes. Without working on the causes,
one cannot expect to
yield any results. Each and everything must have its own cause and
a complete cause
- things cannot appear without any cause. Things do not appear from
nowhere, from the
wrong cause, or from an imcomplete cause. So the source of all the
sufferings is the
negative deeds.
Negative deeds basically means not knowing reality,
not knowing the true nature of
the mind. Instead of seeing the true nature of the mind, we cling
to a self without any
logical reason. All of us have a natural tendency to cling to a
self because we are so
used to it. It is a kind of habit we have formed since beginningless
time.
However if we carefully examine and investigate, we
cannot find the self. If there is
a self, it has to be either body, mind or name. First, the name
is empty by itself. Any
name can be given to anybody. So the name is empty by itself.
Likewise the body. We say "my body". just like "my house,
my car, my home, my
country" and so forth, so the body and "I" are separate. If we examine
every part
of the body, we cannot find anywhere, anything called "I" or the
self. It is just many
things together that form what we cling to as the body or the self.
If we investigate
carefully from head to toe, we cannot find anywhere a thing called
self. The body is
not a self because the body has many parts, many different parts.
People can still
remain alive without certain parts of the body, so the body is not
the self.
Likewise the mind. We think that the mind may be the
self, but the mind is actually
changing from moment to moment. All the time the mind is changing.
And the past
mind is already extinct, already gone. Something that is already
gone cannot be called
the self. And the future mind is yet to arise. Something that is
yet to arise cannot be
the self. And the present mind is changing all the time, every moment
it is changing.
The mind when we were a baby and the mind when we are an adult are
very different.
And these different minds do not occur at one time. It is all the
time changing, all the
time changing, every moment it is changing. Something that is constantly
changing
cannot be the self.
So now, apart from name, body or mind, there is no such
thing called the self, but
due to long habit, we all have a very strong tendency to cling to
a self. Instead of
seeing the true nature of the mind, we cling at a self without any
logical reason.
And as long as we have this, it is just like mistaking a colourful
rope for a snake.
Until we realise that it is not a snake but only a rope, we have
fear and anxiety. As
long as we cling to a self, we have suffering. Clinging to a self
is the root of all the
sufferings. Not knowing reality, not knowing the true nature of
the mind, we cling
to a self.
When you have a "self", naturally there are "others"
- the self and others. The
"self and others" are dependent on the "self". Just like right and
left, if there is
right, there has got to be a left. Likewise, if there is a self,
there are others. When
you have a self and others, attachment then arises to one's own
side, one's friends
and relatives and so forth, and hatred arises towards "others" whom
you disagree
with, towards the people who have different views, different ideas.
These three are
main poisons that keep us in this net of illusions, samsara. Basically
the ignorance
of not knowing and clinging to a self, attachment or desire, and
hatred - these three
are the three main poisons. And from these three, arise other impurities,
such as
jealousy, pride and so forth. And when you have these, you create
actions. And when
you create actions, it is like planting a seed on a fertile ground
that in due course
will yield results. In this way we create karma constantly and are
caught up in the
realms of existence.
To be completely free from samsara, we need the wisdom
that can cut the root of
samsara, the wisdom that realises selflessness. Such wisdom also
depends on method.
Without the accumulation of method, one cannot cause wisdom to arise.
And without
wisdom, one cannot have the right method. Just like needing two
wings in order to
fly in the sky, one needs both method and wisdom in order to attain
enlightenment.
The most important method, the most effective method, is based on
loving-kindness,
universal love and compassion, and from this arises the bodhicitta,
or the enlightenment
thought, which is the sincere wish to attain perfect enlightenment
for the sake of all
sentient beings. When you have this thought, then all the right
and virtuous deeds
are naturally acquired.
On the other side, you need wisdom, the wisdom that
realises the true nature of all
phenomena, and particularly of the mind - because the root of samsara
and nirvana,
everything, is the mind. The Lord Buddha said: "One should not indulge
in negative
deeds, one should try to practice virtuous deeds, and one should
tame the mind."
This is the teaching of the Buddha. The fault lies in our wild mind,
we are caught up
in samsara or the cycle of existence. The purpose of all the eighty-four
thousand
teachings of the Buddha is to tame our mind. After all, everything
is the mind - it is the
mind which suffers, it is the mind which experiences happiness,
it is the mind which is
caught up in samsara and it is the mind that attains liberation
or enlightenment. So
when the true nature of the mind is realised, all other things,
all other outer and inner
things, are then naturally realised.
So what is the mind? If one tries to investigate where
the mind is, one cannot find
the mind anywhere. One cannot pinpoint any part of the body and
say, "This is my
mind." So it is not inside the body, not outside the body, and not
in between the body.
If something exists, it has to be of specific shape or colour but
one cannot find it in
any shape or any colour. So the nature of the mind is emptiness.
But when we say that everything is emptiness and doesn't
exist, it does not mean
that it does not conventionally exist. After all, it is the mind
which does all the wrong
things, it is the mind which does all the right things, it is the
mind which experiences
suffering and so forth. Therefore there is a mind of course - we
are not dead or
unconscious, but are conscious living beings, and there is a stream
of continuity of
the consciousness, constantly. Just like the candle light that is
burning, the clarity
of the mind is constantly continuing. The characteristic of the
mind is clarity. You
cannot find it in any form or in any colour or in any place, yet
there is a clarity that
is constantly continuing. This is the characteristic of the mind.
And the two, the
clarity and emptiness are inseparable, just like fire and the heat
of fire are inseparable.
The clarity and the emptiness cannot be separated. The inseparability
of the two is
the essence, the unfabricated essence of the mind.
In order to experience such a state, it is important
first to go through the preliminary
practices. Also, through preliminary practices one accumulates merit.
It is best to
meditate on insight wisdom. For that one needs to prepare the present
mind, our ordinary
mind that is constantly in streams of thoughts. Such a busy and
agitated mind will not be
a base for insight wisdom. So first we have to build a base with
concentration, using the
right method. Through concentration, one tries to bring the mind
to a very stable state.
And on such stable clarity and single-pointedness, one then meditates
on insight wisdom
and through this one realises the true nature of the mind. But to
realise such, one requires
a tremendous amount of merit, and the most effective way of acquiring
the merit is to
cultivate bodhicitta.
So with the two together, method and wisdom, one can
realise the true nature. And
when one has realised the true nature, on the basis of that and
increasing wisdom,
eventually one will reach the full realisation and will attain enlightenment.